It is still an equation.
No, you must always do the same thing to both sides of an equation or to the numerator and the denominator
Any time you have a variable in the numerator or denominator in an equation, you multiply by the number where ever its on the fraction to both sides of the equation.
The simplification will be positive. In other words, the numerator and the denominator will NOT stay negative.
No!If numerator and denominator have the same signs the fraction is positive.If numerator and denominator have opposite signs the fraction is negative.
It is still an equation.
No, you must always do the same thing to both sides of an equation or to the numerator and the denominator
Both the numerator and denominator are polynomials
They are both parts of a fraction. The denominator is the bottom number, what the equation is out of, 2/3 , in this case the denominator is the number 3. and the numerator is the number on top, in this case the number 2.
Proper fraction - A proper fraction is a fraction where the numerator (the top number) is less that the denominator (the bottom number). Proportion - An equation stating that two ratios are equivalent is called a proportion.
Any time you have a variable in the numerator or denominator in an equation, you multiply by the number where ever its on the fraction to both sides of the equation.
An expression which contains polynomials in both the numerator and denominator.
You would normally start by multiplying both sides of the equation by whatever is in the DENOMINATOR (the bottom part of the fraction), to get rid of fractions.
The simplification will be positive. In other words, the numerator and the denominator will NOT stay negative.
No!If numerator and denominator have the same signs the fraction is positive.If numerator and denominator have opposite signs the fraction is negative.
And the denominator is 0
If both the numerator AND denominator are the same... the fraction is an equivalent for the number 1